RESERVATION PROVISIONS FOR SC/ST/OBC PIB
Reservation Provisions for SC/ST/OBC
Reservation in admission
of students belonging to Scheduled Castes (SCs), Scheduled Tribes (STs) and
Other Backward Classes (OBCs) in Central Educational Institutions established,
maintained or aided by the Central Government is enforced through the Central
Educational Institutions (Reservation in Admissions) Act, 2006 as amended from
time to time. At present there is no proposal under consideration of Government
to enact legislation for implementing reservation in services under the Central
Government and its Public Sector Undertakings.
The policy of
reservation in services is administered through executive instructions. The
Hon’ble Supreme Court in the case of Indira Sawhney vs. Union of India (W.P.
No. 930 of 1990) has held that these instructions have the force of law.
This information was
given by Minister of State for Social Justice and Empowerment Shri Vijay Sampla
in a written reply in Lok Sabha today.
Source: PIB (10.01.2019)
**************************************
TWO DAYS’ COUNTRYWIDE GENERAL STRIKE
WORKING CLASS OF INDIA RISES IN A TIDE AGAINST MODI GOVERNMENT’S POLICIES
K Hemalata
President CITU
The magnificent country wide general strike on
8-9 January 2019 reflected the tide of people’s anger against the anti worker,
anti people and anti national neoliberal policies pursued by the BJP led
government at the centre. It surpassed, in its sweep and depth, even the
earlier two massive general strikes, on 2nd September 2015 and 2016 held during
this Modi government’ regime.
The participation of workers in the general
strike across sectors and the massive support and solidarity it received from
all cross sections of people across the country indicate the growing resentment
of people against the government. The national organisations of the peasants
and agricultural workers, dalits, adivasis etc,. extended active support and
called for a ‘grameen bandh’ bringing rural India to a standstill. The retired
employees’ organisations also have actively campaigned for and supported the
strike.
Full reports of the strike have not been
received. Below is the information as up to the afternoon of 9th January.
The strike in Assam was unprecedented. All the
tea gardens were closed. Refineries were closed. Workers, both permanent and
contract workers picketed and demonstrated outside several refineries. Workers
along with fraternal mass organisations of peasants, agricultural workers,
students, women etc held rail roko all over the state. Police arrested hundreds
of activists including Tapan Sharma, general secretary of the state committee
of CITU.
The strike received massive response from the
working class in Bihar. Road transport was totally paralyzed. Scheme workers,
construction workers, beedi workers participated in the strike and held huge
rallies in Samastipur, Khagaria, Darbhanga, Jamui, Begusarai and other
districts. Roads were blocked in Samastipur, Katihar etc. The state bandh
called by the Left parties in support of the strike, on the issues of peasants
and agricultural workers and against the deteriorating law and order situation
in the state, on 9th January was total.
The industrial workers and employees in NCR
Delhi joined the strike in a big way. Only 5 workers joined duty in the public
sector CEL. The industrial areas of Okhla 3 phases, Naraina, Mayapuri,
Mongolpuri 2 phases, Udyognagar, Nangloi, Wazirpur, GT Karnal Road, Badlhi,
Rajasthanpuri, Bhorgarh etc, were totally closed. Workers struck work and
marched in processions which culminated in rallies in different industrial
areas. Around 2000 to 3000 workers participated in each rally. Teachers and
students of Delhi University and Jawaharlal Nehru University joined the strike
en masse. Universities were closed.
Gujarat, home state of Prime Minister Modi,
witnessed such a joint strike of workers for the first time in many decades.
The trade unions took up extensive joint campaign. Engineering workers in Baroda,
Surat, Bhavnagar, Rajkot, Junagarh, Ahmedabad, most of them not organised under
any trade union joined the strike in large numbers. Despite the threats of
victimisation from the BJP government in the state, anganwadi employees and
ASHAs joined the strike and held massive demonstrations in most of the
districts in the state. For the first time midday meal workers joined the
strike. BMS campaigned extensively against the strike calling it a ‘political
strike’. Despite this, anganwadi employees affiliated to the BMS union in 3
ICDS projects in the state joined the strike and also the demonstrations held
on the occasion. Big rallies were held in 8 cities – Ahmedabad, Surat, Rajkot,
Junagarh, Baroda, Anand and Palanpur. Around 3000 to 8000 workers participated
in each.
The modern industrial area of Gurgaon in
Haryana witnessed good response of the workers to the strike. Hero Honda
declared 3 days’ holiday. Except Maruti, most of the big industries including
Honda remained closed. Workers in all the smaller industries in the area struck
work and joined rallies. A huge joint rally of industrial workers was held on
8th January. Workers in govt sector, roadways and unorganised sector like
brick-kiln, forest, village chowkidar, construction etc joined the strike in a
big way.
Strike in Rajasthan in different industries, both in organised and
unorganised sector has been quite noticeable despite severe police repression
on the striking workers in the MNC dominated industrial area in Neemrana. There
have been numerous demonstrations and procession by the striking workers along
with others throughout the state.
The scheme workers, MGNREGA workers, Hydel
project workers as well as industrial workers in Himachal Pradesh participated
in the strike. Huge rallies with mostly women workers were held in several
district headquarters.
Despite the difficult political situation in
the state, unorganized sector workers and scheme workers participated in the
strike in thousands in Jammu and Kashmir. Interstate bus services were off the
road. A procession with the participation of scheme workers, railway contract
workers, construction workers, coal mine workers, hydro project workers,
vendors, middle class employees etc was held in Jammu. Protest demonstrations
were held in almost all the districts in the Kashmir valley.
The industrial areas of Bokaro, Ranchi,
Adityapur, Gamharia in Jarkhand were almost closed due to the strike.
Pharmaceutical industry was closed. Beedi workers and stone quarry workers in
Pakur, Sahebganj and Chatra and Bauxite workers in Lohardaga were in total
strike as were the workers in the copper mines and industry.
.
Over 30 lakh workers, including industrial
workers, public sector, government, bank, insurance, BSNL etc employees, scheme
workers and unorganized sector workers, participated in the strike in
Karnataka. There was total strike in public road transport; autos were off the
road in Bengaluru. All the permanent workers in multinational corporations
Toyota Kirloskar, Volvo buses and trucks, Coca Cola etc participated in the
strike. Strike was total in the industrial areas of Bengaluru, Mysuru etc.
Despite the large scale disturbances sought to
be created by the BJP against entry of women of all ages to the temple in
Sabarimala, joint campaign was extensively conducted all over Kerala with an
effort to reach every nook and corner of the state. Strike was total. Workers
and members of other mass organisations picketed trains at 32 points. Train
traffic was disrupted and several trains had to be cancelled. Trivandrum,
Cochin and Kozhikode airport ground handling staff were on strike causing
disruption of flights. Because of the campaign, people extended support to the
strike. There were very few passengers in the buses and trains. Thousands of
workers have gathered at the 483 strike centres which have been opened across
the state. These centres were active for entire 48 hours duration of strike
throughout day and night.
In addition to the total participation of
Anganwadi employees, ASHAs and midday meal workers in the strike in Madhya
Pradesh, thousands of workers in private industries, particularly cement
industry participate in the strike. Strike was total in all the cement units
where CITU had affiliated unions. In addition it was near total in Hitech and
75% in Heavy Engineering Workers. Workers in the industrial clusters in Indore,
Neemuch etc,. and the contract workers in NFIL joined the strike. Though most
of the road transport workers are not organised under any trade union, the
extensive campaign by the CITU state committee resulted in massive participation
of road transport workers with transport being seriously affected in 22
districts in the state, where no passenger buses could run. In Bhopal, 70% of
the buses could not operate and 80% of city buses were stopped in depots. Even
under government pressure, only 15% - 20% buses were operated. Strike in the
coal mines in the state was also massive.
With the total participation of the transport
workers in BEST (Bombay Electricity Supply and Transport) in the strike, bus
services were off the road in Mumbai. There was total strike by workers in
multinational companies like BOSCH, CEAT, Crompton, Samsonite etc. Thousands of
permanent and contract workers of Reliance Industries also joined the strike.
The industrial areas in Pune, Nashik, Aurangabad, Kolhapur, Icchalkaranji were
seriously affected due to the strike. Highways were blocked in many places. A
massive rally planned jointly in Solapur could not be held as police denied
permission because of Prime Minister’s visit to the city on that day.
Manipur bore a deserted look due to the
massive strike. Vehicular traffic was totally stopped; educational institutions
shut down and examinations were postponed. All the major markets were closed.
Road blocks and demonstrations were held in many places.
There was a bandh like situation in Odisha.
Road transport was totally off. Strike was 80% in cement and engineering
industries. The strike in the public sector units like NALCO, Port and Dock and
Indian Oil was over 80%. Scheme workers totally participated in the strike.
Unorganised sector workers held rasta roko and rail roko in several places. All
political parties including the ruling BJD, except BJP supported the strike.
Strike was total among the PUNBUS employees and electricity
employees in Punjab and Chandigarh. Workers in the industrial areas of Ludhiana
including Hero cycles, the cement factories in Bathinda, industries in Amritsar
went on strike. Contract employees in private hospitals were on strike
throughout the state. Scheme workers joined the strike en masse and
participated in thousands in the demonstrations, rallies and rasta roko across
the state.
Strike in Tamil Nadu was immense. Pondicherry
witnessed a total bandh like situation with all sectors being paralysed. Over
85% of the public sector Salem steel plant employees, 70% of the BHEL employees
were on strike. Workers in Neyveli Lignite, Tuticorin port and Salem Chemplast
also joined the strike. The textile industry including the cooperative spinning
mills, power looms, NTC mills were affected. 50% of the workers in the
engineering industry were on strike. Workers in Madras Export Processing Zone also
went on strike. Manufacturing units in north and south Chennai were closed.
Loading and unloading were stopped. Workers in several railway goods sheds were
on strike. Majority of the total markets in the state witnessed total strike.
80% electricity employees were on strike. Bill collection was closed in 90%
centres. There was total strike in Thiruvallur thermal plant. 85% autos were
off the road. Tea, rubber and coffee plantation workers including those in big
estates went on strike. Street vendors also joined. Many other industries
including the famous knitwear industry in Tiruppur, chemical industry, Salt
Corporation, Ashok Leyland, tanneries, Tasmac, sugar, etc witnessed massive
strike. Scheme workers joined. Beedi factories in 67 villages and towns were
closed. Crackers and construction workers were on strike. 80% of autos were off
the road.
Over 21 lakh workers and employees in
Telangana participated in the strike. Strike was total in the automobile
manufacturing units and breweries and distilleries and 80% in the engineering
units in the industrial areas in Hyderabad and surrounding districts. 90% of
the contract workers in NTPC joined the strike. Over 65% scheme workers joined
the strike despite the threats and intimidation by the TRS government and its
administration.
In Agartala in Tripura, despite the use of force, BJP government
could manage to get only 30% of the shops opened and around 30% of buses to
operate. Almost same has been the situation in many other districts of the
state. Teachers attended schools but there were no students.
The main participants in the strike in
Uttarakhand were the anganwadi employees and midday meal workers in addition to
the government employees. In some places hotel workers, contract and
outsourcing workers, work charged employees also participated. However, rallies
were held in all the districts.
East India Pharmaceuticals, Britannia and
other big industries in Kolkata were closed due to the strike in West Bengal.
There was total strike in the jute mills with all except one being closed as
well as in the engineering industry despite the terror by the Trinamool goons.
There was no loading in trucks. Passenger and goods transport by in the state
were practically out off roads. There was total strike in the industrial areas
in 24 Paraganas, Hooghly, and Howrah. In tea garden workers in Jalpaiguri,
Alipurduar and Dinajpur were on strike and participated in Rasta roko
demonstrations. There was good strike in coal and steel in the state. 60% of
the permanent workers in Calcutta port were on strike. 70% of street vendors in
Kolkata joined the strike. Universities and colleges remained closed with the
lecturers and students joining the strike. Despite attck unleashed by Police
and Trinamool Congress goons on the striking workers in the state, it was
resisted by the workers along with democratic people from all walks of lives
throughout the state heroically. Police arrested hundreds of
activists and leaders including Anadi Sahu, general secretary of the CITU state
committee.
Participation of workers in the major
industries in this strike all over the country was quite high compared to the
earlier strikes.
The overall participation of strike in the
coal industry was around 70%- 75%. Production and dispatch almost collapsed.
Both permanent and contract workers joined the strike in almost all the big
projects including the outsourced projects.
Thirty lakh electricity workers, employees and
engineers in the power sector joined the strike across the country at the call
of the National Coordination Committee of Electricity Employees and Engineers.
The strike in the oil sector was
unprecedented, particularly in Assam. Employees in various refineries in Assam
joined the strike and picketed offices. Oil workers of 3 out of the 4 unions in
Kochi refinery joined the strike despite the management getting a court order
banning the strike. Contract workers participated along with the permanent
employees. Overall, strike in the petroleum sector has been substantive in the
eastern, north-eastern and southern India while it was partial in western and
northern part.
There was good strike in the steel industry
with near total strike in Vizag steel, Salem steel and Bhadravati. In Rourkela
steel permanent workers joined the strike and picketed the plant and strike was
around 50% on the whole. Contract workers joined the strike en masse. The
strike in other steel plants viz., Bokaro, Bhilai and Durgapur was partial.
Strike was partial in the ports as some of the
major unions did not join the strike in some of the major ports. But cargo
handling was affected in Paradip, Tuticorin, Kolkata, Haldia, Visakhapatnam and
Cochin ports.
Road transport was highly affected creating a
bandh like situation in many states in the country. An estimated 3.5 crore
transport workers and small owners participated in the strike. The strike in
the road transport sector was total with the participation of workers in public
and private passenger and goods transport including autos in Kerala, Bihar,
Odisha, Assam and Arunachal Pradesh. Strike was over 80% in West Bengal. Strike
had serious impact in Punjab, several districts of Karnataka, Maharashtra, and
Jharkhand.
Construction workers participated in the
strike in a big way as well as in the demonstrations in the entire country.
Plantation workers, tea, coffee, rubber, joined the strike en masse in Assam,
West Bengal, Kerala and in large numbers in Tamil Nadu and Karnataka.
In addition to the industrial workers, the strike saw massive
participation of employees in the service sectors also.
Women scheme workers in all states including
where the trade union movement was weak, participated not only in the strike
but in the demonstrations all over the country. They lent visibility to the
strike even in places where no other trade union existed.
Strike among insurance employees was near
total all over the country. Lakhs of bank employees including the officers in
the Regional Rural Banks, Cooperative Banks, Reserve Bank and National Bank for
Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) participated in the strike at the
call of All India Bank Employees’ Association (AIBEA) and Bank Employees’
Federation of India (BEFI).
Around 13 lakh central government employees
joined the strike across the country as per the call given by the Confederation
of Central Government Employees and Workers. The strike was total in the postal
and income tax departments. In addition employees of Audit and Accounts, Civil
Accounts, Atomic Energy, Geological Survey of India, Customs and Central
Excise, Survey of India, Botanical Survey of India, Central Ground Water Board,
Postal Accounts, Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), Printing and
Stationery, Indian Bureau of Mines, AGMARK, Central Government Health Scheme
(CGHS), Medical Stores Depots, Film Division of India, Indian Council for
Medical Research (ICMR), Indian Council of Agricultural Research, Central Food
Processing Laboratory, Census Department, National Sample Survey Organisation
(NSSO), Defence Accounts, Rehabilitation Department, Central Public Works
Department (CPWD), Institute of Physics, LNCPE, Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute
of Medical Sciences, Canteen Employees, Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation
(EPFO), Passport Department, and various other autonomous and scientific
research institutes participated in the two days’ strike. The strike among
central government employees was total in Kerala, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu,
Odisha, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Chattisgarh, Jharkhand, Haryana, Assam and
other North Eastern states including Tripura. In all other states 60%-80%
employees participated in the strike.
State government employees in many states
joined the strike in a big way. While the strike was 90% in Kerala, around 80%
of state government employees in Haryana and several other states joined the
strike. In Uttar Pradesh over 60% employees were on strike while it was 40% in
Himachal Pradesh.
Strike in BSNL was total in Kerala, West
Bengal and the north eastern states and partial in other states.
In many states retired employees, including
EPS 95 pensioners extended solidarity and support to the strike by joining the
demonstrations and rallies.
Huge demonstrations and rallies were held in
all the states in the industrial centres and district headquarters with the
participation of thousands of workers in each. Industrial workers, middle class
employees, scheme workers and unorganised workers participated in these in
large numbers. Thousands of workers were arrested across the country including
in Assam, Tamil Nadu, and West Bengal etc.
Particularly significant in the strike was the
enormous solidarity and support extended by the various sections of people –
the peasants, agricultural workers, women, youth and students etc. In addition,
the organisations of tribals, dalits etc also supported the strike. Thousands
of members of these organisations and their national and state leaders directly
participated in the demonstrations, rallies, rasta roko and rail roko all over
the country.
True to its commitment to the divisive
ideology as a member of the sangh parivar, and ever loyal to its fraternal
political wing the BJP, the BMS tried to confuse and divide the workers nursing
illusions to weaken the strike. The BMS, which was involved in preparing the
joint charter of demands of the central trade unions when it was part of the
joint trade union movement, now finds the demands to be ‘political’. It had no
problem in participating in struggles including strikes when the Congress led
UPA government was in power. But, with the BJP in power, even when the
government is fast carrying forward the anti worker amendment to the labour
laws to trample labour rights underfoot, totally ignoring the suggestions of
the central trade unions, neglecting the tripartite bodies, BMS strangely finds
the government to be ‘positive’ to workers’ demands. It gathered a few
breakaway groups of central trade unions and created a platform, opposed the
strike and actively campaigned against the strike. But the working class of the
country totally rejected its hypocritical manoeuvres. These attempts in fact
boomeranged as the magnificent two days’ strike clearly showed the participation
of their own ranks in the strike in several states.
What is required now is to take the struggle
against the neoliberal policies forward and heighten and intensify it by
strengthening the unity of the entire working class and the unity of the
working class with the all the other sections of toiling masses.
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